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The Scarlet Letter - Analysis Nathaniel Hawthorne's background influenced him
to write the bold novel The Scarlet Letter. One important influence on the story
is money. Hawthorne had never made much money as an author and the birth of his
first daughter added to the financial burden (Biographical Note VII). He
received a job at the Salem Custom House only to lose it three years later and
be forced to write again to support his family (IX). Consequently, The Scarlet
Letter was published a year later (IX). It was only intended to be a long short
story, but the extra money a novel would bring in was needed (Introduction XVI).
Hawthorne then wrote an introduction section titled The Custom House to extend
the length of the book and The Scarlet Letter became a full novel (XVI). In
addition to financial worries, another influence on the story is Hawthorne's
rejection of his ancestors. His forefathers were strict Puritans, and John
Hathorne, his great-great-grandfather, was a judge presiding during the S! alem
witch trials (Biographical Note VII).
Hawthorne did not condone their acts and
actually spent a great deal of his life renouncing the Puritans in general
(VII). Similarly, The Scarlet Letter was a literal soapbox for Hawthorne to
convey to the world that the majority of Puritans were strict and unfeeling. For
example, before Hester emerges from the prison she is being scorned by a group
of women who feel that she deserves a larger punishment than she actually
receives. Instead of only being made to stand on the scaffold and wear the
scarlet letter on her chest, they suggest that she have it branded on her
forehead or even be put to death (Hawthorne 51). Perhaps the most important
influence on the story is the author's interest in the dark side (Introduction
VIII). Unlike the transcendentalists of the era, Hawthorne confronted reality,
rather than evading it (VII). Likewise, The Scarlet Letter deals with adultery,
a subject that caused much scandal when it w! as first published (XV). The book
revolves around sin and punishment, a far outcry from writers of the time, such
as Emerson and Thoreau, who dwelt on optimistic themes (VII). This background,
together with a believable plot, convincing characterization, and important
literary devices enables Nathaniel Hawthorne in The Scarlet Letter to the
develop the theme of the heart as a prison.
The scaffold scenes are the most
substantial situations in the story because they unify The Scarlet Letter in two
influential ways. First of all, every scaffold scene reunites the main
characters of the novel. In the first scene, everyone in the town is gathered in
the market place because Hester is being questioned about the identity of the
father of her child ( Hawthorne 52). In her arms is the product of her sin,
Pearl, a three month old baby who is experiencing life outside the prison for
the first time (53). Dimmesdale is standing beside the scaffold because he is
Hester's pastor and it is his job to convince her to repent and reveal the
father's name (65). A short time later, Chillingworth unexpectedly shows up
within the crowd of people who are watching Hester after he is released from his
two year captivity by the Indians (61). In the second scene, Dimmesdale is
standing on top of the scaffold alone in the middle of the night (152). He sees
Hester and Pearl walk through the market place on their way back from Governor
Winthrop's bedside (157).
When Dimmesdale recognizes them and tells them to join
him, they walk up the steps to stand by his side (158). Chillingworth appears
later standing beside the scaffold, staring at Dimmesdale, Hester, and Pearl. In
the final scaffold scene, Dimmesdale walks to the steps of the scaffold in front
of the whole town after his Election day sermon (263). He tells Hester and Pearl
to join him yet again on the scaffold (264). Chillingworth then runs through the
crowd and tries to stop Dimmesdale from reaching the top of the scaffold, the
one place where he can't reach him (265). Another way in which the scenes are
united is how each illustrates the immediate, delayed, and prolonged effects
that the sin of adultery has on the main characters. The first scene shows
Hester being publicly punished on the scaffold (52). She is being forced to
stand on it for three hours straight and listen to peop! le talk about her as a
disgrace and a shame to the community (55). Dimmesdale's instantaneous response
to the sin is to lie. He stands before Hester and the rest of the town and
proceeds to give a moving speech about how it would be in her and the father's
best interest for her to reveal the father's name (67). Though he never actually
says that he is not the other parent, he implies it by talking of the father in
third person (67). Such as, If thou feelest it to be for thy soul's peace, and
that thy earthly punishment will thereby be made more effectual to salvation, I
charge thee to speak out the name of thy fellow-sinner and fellow-sufferer (67).
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